Rick Santorum’s mysterious, paradoxical manifesto, ‘It Takes a Family’
By Walter Shapiro | The Ticket – Fri, Feb 17, 2012
Every presidential race has its mysteries. Who really won the recent
low-turnout Maine caucuses--and why are the Republicans having so much trouble counting caucus votes? Did Mitt Romney's dog-on-the-roof
Irish setter Seamus
actually try to defect to Canada? But the biggest campaign riddle
wrapped in an enigma remains, Why does any politician fantasizing about
the White House ever put his name on the cover of a book?
Rick Santorum, who should be basking in his sudden star turn as the
poll-vaulting anti-Romney, is the latest author to pay a political price
for his literary ambitions. Making the rounds of last Sunday morning's
talk shows, the former Pennsylvania senator came under fire for his
unflattering comments about "radical feminists" in his half-forgotten
2005 book,
It Takes a Family: Conservatism and the Common Good. On "Meet the Press," host
David Gregory challenged Santorum
to defend his book's claim, "The radical feminists succeeded in
undermining the traditional family and convincing women that
professional accomplishments are the key to happiness." Rather than try
to justify his implicit critique of women of childbearing years finding
fulfillment in the workplace, Santorum vaguely affirmed a woman's right
to choose her career and gallantly insisted that "the section was
written in large part in cooperation" with his (non-working) wife,
Karen.
No comments:
Post a Comment